Solar, fracking and an Ohio ‘freeze’: The year in review

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By any measure, 2014 was a significant year in the energy world. the continued rise of fracking, impending EPA carbon regulations, and the ever-glacial pace of global climate negotiations are likely familiar stories to Midwest Energy News readers.

But our focus is more at the state and regional level, and over the past year we’ve helped surface and amplify stories that otherwise might have fallen under the radar.

Here are some of the biggest stories of the past year, based on readership metrics and other factors.

1) The solar boom ramps up

While solar power remains a small portion of U.S. electricity generation, dramatically falling prices are already starting to cause significant ripples in the utility sector.

Minnesota’s community solar law, passed in 2013, began to have an impact as the state’s largest utility started taking applications for projects. Because the law doesn’t establish a cap on projects, major solar players are taking an interest in the state.

Minnesota also became the first state in the U.S. to establish a value of solar tariff — a methodology that calculates the full value solar customers provide to the grid — in an effort to defuse ongoing debates over whether these projects are “subsidized” by other ratepayers.

Utilities, concerned about the growth of distributed generation, have sought in some states to roll back incentives and other policies favorable to solar. Most notably in Wisconsin, state regulators approved dramatic increases in fixed charges for three utilities, despite a public outcry and lack of precedent in other states (legal challenges to those decisions are still pending).

During the run-up to the Wisconsin decision, as in other cases nationwide, political conservatives have emerged as solar advocates, shattering the conventional wisdom that clean energy is a hobby-horse for coastal liberals. Debbie Dooley, a prominent Tea Party leader; Matt Neumann, a Republican son a a former U.S. Congressman; and former U.S. Rep. Barry Goldwater were vocal opponents of the Wisconsin utilities’ proposals.

2) Utilities get their way in Ohio

While utilities, industry groups and political allies have largely failed to roll back clean-energy legislation around the U.S., Ohio was a notable exception this year. After years of effort, Republican legislators succeeded in passing SB 310 — a “freeze” that would pause the state’s renewable energy and efficiency benchmarks, while altering their impacts substantially.

Going forward, a study committee established by SB 310 will evaluate whether to further change state clean-energy rules, allow them to continue, or scrap them altogether. The committee is comprised primarily of lawmakers who voted for the freeze.

Three utilities in Ohio also sought policies that would effectively guarantee profits for several aging power plants. Utilities have sought to keep data under wraps that could help evaluate these plans, which critics have decried as “bailouts.”

4) Bakken oil trains a ‘ticking time bomb’

Late this year North Dakota officials announced plans to require treatment of Bakken crude oil to make it less explosive when shipped. Explosions of oil trains last year in Quebec and North Dakota continue to resonate as industry and government officials seek to prevent another disaster.

Meanwhile, North Dakota production is slowing down amid a slump in global oil prices.

A look ahead

We’d be remiss if we didn’t note that 2014 also saw the publication of the first Midwest Energy News ebook, Closing the Cloud Factories, which tells the story of the grassroots effort to shut down Chicago’s coal plants (a Spanish version is now available, too).

In 2015, Midwest Energy News will be launching two new daily news services. We’ll tell you more about those in the coming months.

And what will the new year hold for energy policy? Keep reading and find out!

Michigan State University researcher Kyle Powys Whyte has published essays and scholarly articles on how the Dakota Access project represents what he describes as an ongoing form of U.S. colonialism over Native Americans.